Fine Recording Inc: Pioneers in High-Fidelity Studio Recording: UPDATED – 5

C. Robert Fine and Wilma Cozart Fine c.1961 (Source: T. Fine)

Today at Preservation Sound dot com we are pleased to present a special guest: T. Fine, son of high-fidelity recording pioneers C.R Fine and W.C. Fine.  The elder Fines were active studio owners/engineers in the early days of stereophonic LP recording and their efforts brought the world one of the most successful series of LPs ever manufactured: Mercury Records’ Living Presence series (click here for a contemporary reissue of much of this material). 

The younger Mr. Fine presents a history of Fine Recording, INC., the studios, and the equipment that was used; he has also generously provided PS Dot Com with some previously unavailable images of the operation.  We’ll begin with a five-page article from Popular Science (1967) which documents a recording session at Fine Recording, INC.

Click here to read the original article at Popular Science Dot Com

(image source: Popular Science, August 1967)

T. Fine: ” Fine Recording Inc. (h.f. FRI) was a production complex that eventually encompassed four studios, extensive disk-mastering operations, and Walter Sear’s Moog laboratory.  FRI was located in the Great Northern Hotel on 57th Street in Manhattan.

The Great Northern Hotel, Home of FRI., as it appeared in the 1950s (SOURCE: T. Fine)

“The building was torn down in the late 1970’s and the Parker Meridian Hotel is on the site now.

Pouring of the foundation of the Parker Meridian taken from the 7th floor of Sterling Mastering circa 1977 (photo: Bob Ludwig)

“Fine Recording began operation in 1957, first doing mixing and disk mastering while the hotel’s former Ballroom was transformed into a recording space.

Above: The ballroom of the Great Northern Hotel c. 1900, later to become Fine Recording Studio A. The Tiffany glass ceiling remained throughout. (SOURCE: T. Fine)

“In the summer of 1958, the first recording sessions took place in Ballroom Studio A, and continued almost daily until 1971. Studio B, which was located in what had been the ballroom’s service kitchen, was used for small-group sessions, voice-over recording, transcription services and other purposes not requiring a large recording room.

Fine Recording, INC rate-card c. 1959.  In today’s currency: multiply by 11.  (SOURCE: T. Fine)

“A growing sound-for-film business required a film-specialized space, and Studio C was built in 1959, in the suite of rooms on the top floor where conductor Dimitri Mitropoulos had lived. A few years later, the adjoining suite became available, and Studio D was built as a second sound-for-picture studio. Studio C and D shared a film-machine room and both were equipped for 35mm and 16mm synchronized picture and sound work.  The disk-mastering suite, also on the penthouse level, had stereo and mono mastering rooms.

In the late 60’s, Walter Sear had a studio/Moog synthesizer production lab on the 12th floor. Sear was Walter Moog’s NYC regional representative and he provided Moog effects exclusively to Fine Recording clients. After the success of Walter (later Wendy) Carlos’s Moog album, “Switched On Bach” (Columbia), other artists quickly jumped on the Moog bandwagon. Among them were Dick Hyman and Richard Hayman, who recorded several Moog-centric albums for Command. (Ed. note: click here for an excellent  Moog cut from Hyman). Walter Sear did the Moog programming and some of the engineering on those albums, and also recorded his own Moog album for Command, “The Copper Plated Integrated Circuit.”

From the early 1960’s until the end of operations, there was a large tape-duplicating operation in the basement.  Duplicating was originally set up for quarter-track, full-track and 2-track reels, but Fine Recording was also one of the first east coast facilities to duplicate 4-track “Muntz” cartridges, 8-track Lear cartridges and the Philips Compact Cassette.

The studio ceased operation and was sold to Reeves Cinetel in 1971.

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As for equipment: Studio A started out with a Gates Dualux mixing console, which was modified heavily over the years. By 1960, a center-channel buss had been built, and facilities for echo send and return were present from the get-go. The version pictured in the PopSci article (see above – ed.) shows the full extent of the modifications.

Above: the 1960 Gates Dualux console, a slighter later version than installed at FRI.  The Dualux at FRI used 5879 tubes in the mic preamps rather than EF86.  Click here to DL schematics for the Gates 5879 preamps: Gates-M5215_preamp.   Click here to download data on the Gates Dualux: Gates_Dualux_1960

“Fine Recording did not use the Gates Console’s line amps.  Instead the console outputs went through Altec 322C Limiter Amplifiers, which were set to a fixed gain (click here to DL the Altec 322C schematic: Altec-322C)). If you wanted a clean, linear signal (IE., no compression), you just used the console channels conservatively. If you drove the channels beyond a certain level, you’d hit the threshold of the limiter/compressor. This is how the “Command Sound” was achieved, characterized by  bright up-front horns and crunched drum set, but retaining dynamics and punch in the percussion.  (ed. note: ‘Command’ was a prominent recordin the 1960s. For an example of the typical Command sound, click here)

Regarding the session depicted in the Popular Science article: it is of special interest because the master medium was 35mm magnetic film, not tape. The article covers the process from session to mastering to pressing plant. The record in question was one of Enoch Light’s early releases on his Project 3 label (Light started that label after he left Command Records in 1966).

(image source: Popular Science 8/67)

“In 1969, Studio A was rebuilt.  The new Audio Designs & Manufacturing (ADM) console installed was, at the time, among the largest desks outside of Hollywood.

Above: The Fine ADM Console. (SOURCE: T. Fine)

“It featured early assign-automation featuring a patented system. Studio A was originally mono and 2-track.  It later evolved to mono and 3-track, and the 1969 build was for 16-track recording and also 6-track monitoring and mixing for films.

Studio B started out with an RCA console from the former Fine Sound studio on 5th Avenue. This desk had been rebuilt for 3-channel in the mid-50’s (it was based on 3 separate mixers of 4 inputs each, with 3 echo sends and returns). In 1967, Studio B was rebuilt for 8-track, with a new ADM mixing desk. In those days, engineers like to monitor all the tape tracks, but using 8 Altec 604 monitors was not practical. Fine Recording contacted JBL and the famous JBL model #4310 three-way monitor (which was also sold by the thousands as a home-stereo speaker, the Century L-100) was born.  (click here to download further information regarding the JBL/ FRI connection).  Studio B later evolved to a 12-track (a short-lived 1? tape format made by Scully), and then 16-track.

Studio C, the first film-mixing room, had a 1940’s vintage Western Electric/MGM all-passive console, also originally installed at Fine Sound on 5th Avenue. The console took line-level from the machine room and its output was down to about mic level, so Altec amplifier/compressors were used to get back the gain and control peak modulation. Hundreds of films, TV commercials, and special productions were mixed on this console over the years. It later lived at Sear Sound and is now owned by the Museum of Sound Recording group. Studio D’s console was the first all-transistor board at the studio, built in 1966 out of early ADM modules by studio chief engineer Bob Eberenz.

Monitoring was done on Altec A7’s powered by McIntosh amps. Studio B eventually ended up with 8 JBL 4310 speakers powered by smaller McIntosh amps. Tape machines were generally Ampex, but there were Scully 8-tracks and 12-tracks in Studio B for a while.  Mics included a bunch of U-47’s, a bunch of RCA ribbon mics (mainly 44BX and 77DX), some EV 666 dynamics, Church mics acquired from Everest, Schoeps M201’s (used on the Mercury Living Presence recordings, and in the studio),  and a few other types here and there. There were Pultec equalizers all over the place. Also, there were many special-purpose effects devices and modifications to “stock” pieces in order to gain various sounds and effects desired by clients.

From Popular Science 8/67: The mics of Fine Recording.  Evidently there was some editorial confusion regarding microphone-type classification.

“The cutting lathes were Scully, with customized Westrex heads. Stereo cutting amps were McIntosh 200W, capable of 1kW clean peak power! Mono cutting amps were Westrex. Most of the equipment in the duplicating operation was customized or modified.

R. Fine at the Lathe, c. 1959 (SOURCE: T. Fine)

“In 1960, Fine Recording acquired the defunct Everest recording studio in Bayside Queens (see image at head of this article – ed.). This was operated as a separate studio for several years. The Everest studio had a custom Westrex console and was designed for 3-channel 35mm mag-film recording. Eventually, the Bayside location was shut down and the equipment integrated into the Manhattan facility. The old Westrex console sat in a store room and was eventually tossed; think of the value of those components today! (UPDATE: we’ve added detailed information about the Fine Bayside location at the end of this article.  Click here and scroll down to read more). 

The principle players at Fine Recording were owner/president C. Robert Fine, VP and head of mastering George Piros, VP and chief technical engineer Bob Eberenz. Notable recording engineers who worked at the studio over the years included Fred Christie (later of MediaSound), Russ Hamm (Sear Sound, Gotham Audio), Walter Sear (Sear Sound), John Quinn (The Mix Place), Kenny Fredrickson (The Mix Place) and Gerry Block (Sigma Sound Studios NYC). Projectionists, machine room techs and various other employees also had long careers around the NYC studio scene.

Along with owning and running the studio, Bob Fine owned a recording truck, used primarilly to make the Mercury Living Presence classical recordings. His wife, Wilma Cozart Fine, was the VP of classical music at Mercury Records until she retired in 1964 to raise their family. Bob Fine was also an inventor, receiving ten U.S. patents. After Fine Recording, Bob Fine worked for Reeves Telecine until 1974, and then worked as a consultant and studio designer. Fine designed, oversaw the building of, and initially ran the Armstrong Audio/Video complex in Melbourne Australia (later AAV Australia). He later worked at The Mix Place in NYC. Bob Fine passed in 1982. Wilma Cozart Fine returned to the music business in the 1990’s, remastering more than 100 Mercury Living Presence albums for CD release. Wilma Fine passed in 2009.”

Follow the link below for a list of some noteable albums recorded at Fine Recording INC.   And for an excellent + thorough interview of Bob Fine by Bert Whyte, click here to download:  Audio-681_Fine_Recording.pdf

Some albums and songs recorded at Fine Recording:

Terry Snyder: Persuasive Percussion (Command) and Mr. Percussion (United Artists)
Enoch Light: Provacative Percussion, Stereo/35mm, Big Band Bossa Nova and many other albums (Command and Project 3)
Dinah Washington: What a Diff’rence A Day Makes and several other albums (Mercury)
Vaughn Meader: The First Family (Cadence)
Quincy Jones: Birth of a Band, The Big Wide World of Quincy Jones (Mercury)
Shelly Manne: 2-3-4 (Impulse)
Max Roach: It’s Time (Impulse), The Many Sides of Max Roach (Mercury)
Buddy Rich: The Driver and The Voice is Rich (Mercury)
Buddy Rich/Max Roach: Rich Vs. Roach (Mercury)
Sil Austin: Plays Pretty For the People (Mercury)
Dick Hyman: Provacative Piano, Moog, The Age of Electronicus and many other albums (Command)
Doc Severinsen: Fever and many other albums (Command)
Urbie Green: Persuasive Trombone, The Urbie Green Six-Tet and other albums (Command)
Barbara Steisand: early demos
Judy Collins: first two albums (Elektra?)
Les Brown/Vic Schoen: Stereophonic Suite for Two Bands (Kapp)
Otis Spann: Otis Spann Is The Blues (Candid)
Lightenin’ Hopkins: In New York (Candid)
Sarah Vaughn: No Count Sarah and several other albums (Mercury)
Jimmy Cleveland: A Map of Jimmy Cleveland (Mercury)
Clyde Otis: American Dance Favorites (Mercury)
Walter Sear: The Copper Plated Integrated Circuit (Command)
Richard Hayman: Voodoo (Mercury) and Genuine Electric Latin Love Machine (Command)
Janos Starker: Bach Cello Suites (Mercury Living Presence)
Byron Janis: Pictures at an Exhibition (Mercury Living Presence)
The Romeros: The Royal Family of the Spanish Guitar and others (Mercury Living Presence)

Above: the inner gatefold of “Les Brown And His Band Of Renown; Vic Schoen And His All Star Band,” engineered by R. Fine.  

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Ed. Note: T. Fine has provided us with some beautiful images of the Bayside Queens studio that R. Fine operated simultaneously with Fine Recording INC.  We present those images and an account of that operation here:

R. Fine at the Bayside Westrex Console (SOURCE: T. Fine)

T. Fine: ” In the late 1950’s, Everest Records made a brief splash in the music business with high-fidelity records made using 35mm magnetic film instead of magnetic tape. Everest, which was a division of Bellock Industries, built a large studio in Bayside, Queens. The studio was outfitted with Westrex 35mm film recorders, a custom-made Westrex console, and Ampex 300 3-track tape recorders. Everest also had Westrex/Scully LP mastering facilities, and three portable Westrex film recorders. In its brief time in business, Everest made a few dozen classical and pop records from 35mm film masters.

The Everest studio was equipped with several Church microphones, an interesting development that came out of Hollywood in the early 1950’s. Stanley Church of the MGM Sound Department took a Neumann U-47 capsule and built a new body and electronics for it to better suit the needs of film-dialog recording and to allow MGM to use its standard American parts for easy service. Not very many Church microphones were made. They were hand-assembled by Church and his family, according to published reports.  (at left: An Everest LP release of the 1950s. SOURCE)

Bellock Industries closed down the money-losing Everest Records in either late 1960 or early 1961. An excellent history of Everest Records by Lonn Henrichsen and David Patmore was published in Classic Record Collector magazine in the Spring 2007 and Summer 2007 issues. Westrex’s John G. Frayne and J.W. Stafford wrote an article in the July, 1960 issue of the AES Journal describing Everest’s Bayside facility and the methods involved with using 35mm magnetic film as a recording and mastering medium.

Above: the Fine Bayside Machine Room (Source: T. Fine)

Fine Recording bought the Everest studio and equipment in 1961 and went on to make a few dozen 35mm-master LPs for Mercury, Command, Project 3 and Cameo/Parkway, both classical and pop titles. The first session using the new equipment was for Mercury Living Presence, in Rochester NY on May 6, 1961. Records made in the Bayside studio included “Fred Fennell Conducts Cole Porter” for Mercury, “Around The World with Quincy Jones” for Mercury, “The School For Scandal” soundtrack for Command, Duke Ellington’s “Recollections Of The Big Band Era” for Reprise and others.

Duke Ellington’s “Recollections Of The Big Band Era,” recorded at Fine Bayside (SOURCE)

The portable film-recording equipment made several trips to Europe in 1961-63, recording for Mercury, and was used in Mercury’s famous trip to Moscow in 1962. See at example at left (SOURCE). This marked the first time that an American recording crew used American equipment to record Soviet musicians and orchestras. Command Classics records were also recorded on the portable film equipment, perhaps the most famous records were made with William Steinberg and the Pittsburgh Symphony and also solo organ records by Virgil Fox. The final Pittsburgh 35mm recording was made in 1968 and was written about in High Fidelity magazine (July 1968).

Another view of the Fine Bayside Westrex Console.  Source: T. Fine

The photos reproduced here show the Bayside studio circa 1962, after Fine Recording made some changes to the equipment layout and rebuilt the monitoring system. All three images are from a single mixing  session for Mercury’s “The Civil War” album. The Westrex console was big and complex for a recording studio board of that era but relatively simple compared to some Westrex installations in Hollywood. The monitors visible are three Altec A7’s,  as were used in Fine Recording’s Manhattan control rooms. In the machine room image we see Westrex studio and portable recorders in use.  The equipment compliment also featured Ampex 300 3-track tape recorders. Everest’s disk-cutting equipment was moved to Fine Recording’s Manhattan location.

Fine Recording shut down the Bayside studio in the mid-60’s. The Westrex film equipment was integrated into the Manhattan sound-for-picture studios, as can be seen in the 1967 Popular Science photos.”

Above: the former site of Fine Bayside as it stands today on 41st Ave in Queens NY.  (SOURCE)

chris

View Comments

  • Ah, those were the days. Bob Fine in New York, and Bill Putnam in Hollywood. I had the pleasure of working for Bill a number of years. Both Chicago and Hollywood.

  • Nice article. Now that I see these pics, I think I recall the Gates console sold on ebay in the early 2000's. It had a pretty involved modification. The book 'Too Hot to Handle' apparently incorrectly suggests the Gates console was an earlier SA-50 console.

  • Chris, you did a really fantastic job with this. Thank you for updating as more facts came in. Regarding Doug Williams' comment, most published accounts of Fine Recording are not 100% accurate. I would say this web page is as close as it gets. I got fact-checking feedback from actual FR employees, plus referred to old photos and documentation. I also sent around old photos and documentation to jog the memories of first-person participants. So what you read above is factual. -- Tom Fine

  • I knew Bob Fine only as a very friendly competitor of Cue Recording Studios. I was the chief engineer there for many years. Mel Kaiser, the owner, and Bob were good friends. Nothing but good to say about Bob or his studio. This brings back good memories.

  • Chris:

    Great piece on the history of Fine Recording. It's great to see this put together in one place.

    Scott D. Smith CAS

  • Wow! This mornings Goggle Doodle (re:the Moog synthesizer) rang a distant, childhood bell - I thought it might have had some connection to my fathers work at Fine Recording in the 1960's, so I gave Fine Recording a Google search- and here I am! My father, Copthorne Macdonald, worked with Bob Fine at the Great Northern as an electronics engineer in the late 1960's. When I was 9 years old I came to live with him in New York, in a small suite of rooms at The Great Northern. While I only lived in the hotel for a few months, it was both an amazing time and an amazing experience. My Dad passed away last December and as often happens when you lose someone (who you were sure would always be there) - you realize how many questions you forgot to ask. This article answers at least a few of them. Thank you so much!
    Beth Drummond (nee:Macdonald)

  • Hello -- I am a writer in Washington, DC, working on a book about the early history of the Beach Boys, the vocal group from Southern California currently celebrating their 50th anniversary. There is some anecdotal evidence they may have recorded at Fine Studios in NYC in January 1963, and it may have been a vocals only session. Does this ring a bell with anyone? Is it even remotely possible? If this message could be relayed to T. Fine, perhaps studio logs or other documents might shed some light on this matter. Thank you in advance for any help you might offer. And thank you for a very enjoyable website. All the best -- Jim Murphy

  • Cop Macdonald was a ham radio operator and had a column on something or other in the old Mother Earth News. My sister the hippie read it religiously.

  • This is really for Beth and T. Fine but should be of interest to others:

    As a young broadcast engineer I was always wondering why the radio spots that came into us from United Sound Systems in Detroit sounded better than all of the other studios. see:(http://www.soul-source.co.uk/_/articles/soul-articles/ed-wolfrum-detroit-sound-r2445)

    This prompted a trip to see United Sound and this visit directly resulted in my over nearly 50 year career in audio.

    When visiting at United it's owner Jimmy Siracuse, took me around and showed me the studio. For a young 16 year old it was an experience. However the payoff of this visit was yet to come. While sitting at the kitchen table on the second floor of United, Jimmy was called away for a phone call. when he came back he asked if I would like to run up to Orchestra Hall as a buddy of his Bob Fine has a problem with a noisy microphone and he as going to let him borrow one of his. I said certainly and the friend ham radio friend who I came with piled into Jimmy station wagon and drove to Orchestra Hall in Detroit, about a mile or so from United.

    When we arrived Jimmy was warmly greeted by Bob Fine and we went into the hall where a rehearsal was proceeding. We were all introduced to Bob Eberenz and to the conductor Paul Paray. Jimmy unpacked the mike and it was put into position by Bob and the rehearsal started again. Bob listened for a while and we were the escorted into the "truck".

    In the truck was a small mixer, 2 Ampex 300 recorders and a Westrex 3 channel 35 mm recorder sitting on a cobbled bench above the mixer. I was not too impressed after having just been to United Sound. That all changed when Bob Eberenz open the faders.
    This was my introduction to real " High Fidelity" recording and my life has never been the same since. I realized then that this is what God intended for me and it was a direct result of this interaction with Jimmy and the two Bobs. I remember that truck as if it happened yesterday.

    I ended up as an engineer at United Sound, Detroit and later as the Chief Engineer for a few years before it's sale to Don Davis.

    Sorry to be so long winded...but wait, there's more:

    During my near 10 year stint at United and some years later, I was asked to drop off a master at Bob Fine's place by Jimmy's closest friend Artie Field on a trip to a N.Y. AES convention. There I was, surprisingly remembered by Bob Fine and then introduced to Cop MacDonald who Jimmy must have told I was a Ham operator. What transpired there was a meeting of audio minds I will never forget. Cop was one of the warmest and nicest men of audio I had the pleasure of knowing. It is no wonder you dad was with the great men of audio like Bob Fine and Bob Eberenz. Great men flock together it seems and Bob Fine Studios had a flock of them.

    After that first "eyeball QSO" Cop and I had many more on the 75 meter amateur band. I was sad to see Cop become a "Silent Key". Both his Ham, and his Audio Buddies will miss him.

    73,

    Ed

  • Hi Ed Wolfrum:

    Very interesting stories indeed.

    Let me probe your memory about the day you brought the microphone over to the Detroit Symphony recording session. Do you specifically remember old Orchestra Hall (then the Paradise Theater, according to the Mercury session books)? Do you specifically remember seeing the 35mm machine? I don't think both could be the same memory on the same day. Here's why -- before the time Mercury was making 35mm recordings, the venue in Detroit changed to Cass Technical High School's auditorium.

    Detroit was a challenge for Mercury until the last years. Originally, for various reasons of orchestra management politics, courtesy, etc, the recording venue had to be Edsel Ford Auditorium, which was a terrible acoustic space (an Edsel, if you will). That venue was usable for mono recording but became intolerable when stereo recording began in 1956. So the switch was soon made to the dilapidated old Orchestra Hall, which was called the Paradise Theater in those days and was not in a very nice part of town. The switch wasn't complete until 1959, with some stereo sessions in 1956-58 taking place at Ford Auditorium. The Paradise Theater recordings have more "air and space" and sound "bigger" due to a more open and reverberant acoustic space. As soon as the Cass Technical High School auditorium was "discovered" (and it may well have been discovered via a tip from one of the local recording engineers), it was used. And that "discovery" happened in 1960, before the 35mm rig was added to the Mercury arsenal. Combining 35mm quality with Cass's acoustics resulted in the lush, deep and detailed sound quality of the later Mercury recordings from Detroit. By then, Paul Paray had built a superb orchestra, and 10 years of working together had formed a brilliant musical dynamic.

    So if you brought that mic over to the Paradise Theater, it was pre-35mm. The switch to Cass took place in 1960, and the first 35mm session was in the spring of 1961. All of this comes directly out of the Mercury session books.

    Also of interest -- do you remember what type mic you brought over to the Mercury session? Did United have any Schoeps M201 mics? By 1959, Mercury was using an array of 3 Schoeps M201 mics, so it's very interesting if something different was used in a later session because of technical problems. It's entirely possible, anyone who owns old mics knows that they can develop tube noise, resistor noise, cable noise, capsule noise or other problems, especially when taken on the road.

    Thanks for your stories, very interesting! Any other details you can pull out of your memory banks are greatly appreciated.

    -- Tom Fine

    I suppose it's possible that the orchestra

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